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🎁 Gate APP has been updated to the latest version v8.0.5. Share your authentic experience on Gate Square for a chance to win Gate-exclusive Christmas gift boxes and position experience vouchers.
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The precious metals market has been quite volatile recently, especially silver. To be honest, now silver, platinum, and palladium are starting to resemble speculative concept stocks.
Some leading exchanges have begun to continuously raise trading thresholds, with the core goal of curbing the疯狂操作 of short-term speculators. But here’s the question — can this really change the long-term logic of the market? Analysts generally believe it cannot.
Why do they say that? First, the combined force of retail investors and algorithms is not small. When liquidity is already insufficient, these forces can turn the futures market for small commodities into chaos. Holidays and quiet trading windows are the easiest times for speculators to strike.
A trader pointed out a historical pattern: when exchanges raise margin requirements, it usually signals that a bull market is nearing its peak. But not everyone agrees with this view. Some analysts believe that raising margins is just a temporary brake on certain out-of-control contracts, and the underlying driving factors remain. The larger upward trend will not be shaken. Behind this difference, it actually reflects the complexity of the market.
Interestingly, a significant portion of the recent $500 increase in gold prices has been driven up by speculators. An increase in margin requirements does not necessarily mean the bull market is over, but a pullback is still possible. The key point is — speculators have already infiltrated markets with thin liquidity.
From a more macro perspective, this is not just a trading issue. What exchanges and regulators are truly worried about is that speculators might completely hijack the market during periods of light trading, and when their positions become unsustainable, the entire system could collapse. This concerns the credibility of the futures market, the actual demand for commodities in the global supply chain, and whether all businesses relying on these assets can operate normally. The current goal is to prevent such systemic risks.